By Quin Hillyer on 5.30.07 @ 12:08AM
Principles are principal.
What's wrong with the right these days?
Allow, please, for some rambling, for something that is less a
tightly crafted essay than some thinking out loud. Consider:
Here we are facing a leftist Democratic congressional leadership
that is calling, in effect, for surrender in a foreign land -- and
we can't gain much traction on the issue.
Here we are facing a leftist Democratic congressional leadership
that badly porks up an "emergency" defense spending bill with
non-defense projects -- and we can't gain much traction.
The leftist Democratic leadership passes a budget that would
effectively require a massive tax increase. It moves towards
elimination of "abstinence education" even though the
pro-abstinence efforts are popular with parents. It pushes big
government everywhere even though polls still show preferences for
smaller government. It came to office, on a wave of disgust at
Republican ethical lapses, promising higher standards and better
enforcement -- and then it fails to discipline one of its most
prominent members when he breaks the rules.
The leftist Democratic speaker of the House embarrassed herself
by pretending to conduct diplomacy with Syria, and was widely
excoriated even in the liberal media. The Majority Leader of the
Senate keeps sticking his foot in his mouth. The front-runner for
the Democratic nomination is somebody with some of the highest
"hard negatives" in poll results that any presidential candidate
has ever seen. The Democrats appoint to the Homeland Security
Committee a man best known for accepting a dirty $100,000 payment
and hiding $90,000 of it in his freezer.
But the right can't get much traction.
Finally, we Americans are enjoying the greatest economy in the
history of mankind, with yesterday's report about soaring consumer
confidence adding to the good news. The unemployment rate is very
low. Inflation remains in check. Interest rates are below average.
Wages are up. Home ownership is at record levels, while home values
remain near record levels even after a slight slowdown. Stock
market indices are at record levels, and the percentage of
Americans owning securities is at or near all-time highs. The
poverty rate is ticking downward. Shopping malls are filled to the
brim. All at the same time, all when somebody usually identified as
conservative sits in the Oval Office.
But the right still can't get traction.
MAYBE IT'S TIME FOR a conservative renewal. Perhaps it's time for
conservatives to become reformers again. Definitely, it's time for
conservatives to remember what conservatives are supposed to
believe in.
We're the movement that believes in a smaller, more efficient
government. We're the movement that believes in applying the
lessons of history to current situations -- including the lesson
that you can't secure a peace without boots on the ground. We're
the movement that believes in the rule of law. We believe in
national security. We believe in traditional values. We believe in
open government, and in honest government. We believe in civil
discourse -- except that on immigration policy, the pro-leniency
faction continues to call the law-and-order faction "bigots,"
"nativists," racists, and the like, and our president says the
law-and-order folks "do not want to do what's right for
America."
We believe in empiricism, meaning we learn from evidence rather
than rely on theory. Yet our administration ignores a National
Intelligence Estimate that warns of infertile ground for democracy
in Iraq and the probability of sectarian violence if Saddam Hussein
is overthrown -- and, in response, the administration overthrows
Saddam (good) without planning much at all for sectarian violence
or for creating the institutions necessary to seed democracy.
We believe in merit, supposedly. Yet "our" administration fills
the appointed ranks of the bureaucracy with second-raters. To
handle national disasters, the president appoints a guy whose
previous job experience involved heading a horse-industry interest
group (and resigning under pressure therefrom). To oversee the
Justice Department, and to handle Iraqi reconstruction, and
supposedly to serve on the Supreme Court, values such as "loyalty"
and, well, "values," are held in higher esteem than brilliance and
relevant experience.
Faced with incompetence, the president cites lack of
law-breaking as a positive attribute. Faced with unprecedented
disaster, the president says an appointee has done a "heckuva job."
Faced with a despot and former KGB honcho governing a huge nation
with thousands of nuclear weapons, the president informs us that he
can see into the despot's heart and soul and that the selfsame
heart and soul are good.
In Congress, our leaders fight to keep their pork, appoint
ethically challenged Members to key committees, break their word
and bend all sorts of rules when in power and yet get re-elected by
their caucus....
OH, WAIT, EXCUSE ME, I went off track. I was listing the things
conservatives believe in, and I somehow found myself talking about
what Republicans in power have done. Those are two separate things:
conservatives, and Republicans in power. Conservatives have reason
to support those Republicans only to the extent that the
Republicans serve conservative ends, or if the fall of those
Republicans will drag down conservatives with them.
Back in 1960, Barry Goldwater famously told conservatives to
"grow up." He said our time would come. He was right -- but it took
20 years. And it took a unique conservative leader, with unique
skills and unique appeals, to bring our movement to fruition.
We do not have the luxury of waiting 20 more years. Our society
is in peril right now. We must rebuild quickly.
As we rebuild, we must do what conservatives of an earlier
generation did. Build from the ground up -- as did people like Paul
Weyrich and Richard Viguerie and Morton Blackwell, and Cliff White
and Bill Rusher, and Ed Feulner, and Stan Evans, and Phyllis
Schlafly, and others too numerous to mention -- at the same time we
try to find people at the very top to serve as our
standard-bearers.
If we think that all will be well if we merely find the right
presidential candidate, we are sadly mistaken. And we are equally
mistaken if we think that grassroots development and organization
and training alone will solve our problems, absent candidates such
as Reagan backed by an "opportunity society" led by a Kemp and a
Gingrich, a young Lott, a Bob Walker, a Vin Weber, and a Dan
Lungren.
The way to rebuild quickly is to work both from the bottom up
and from the top down, simultaneously. The truth is that
the left is so outlandish that we really ought to be winning these
days, and winning big. The fact that we instead are losing big is
empirical evidence that the taste of power made us forget where it
is that we are supposed to be going.
Use power on behalf of principles, rather than vice versa, and
we can rebuild in a lot less than 20 years. But we must begin
now.
More in future weeks...
topics:
Education, Law, Supreme Court, Iraq, Immigration, Nuclear Weapons